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Osama Bin Laden's Remains Buried At Sea, U.S. Officials Say

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  • Osama Bin Laden's Remains Buried At Sea, U.S. Officials Say

    OSAMA BIN LADEN'S REMAINS BURIED AT SEA, U.S. OFFICIALS SAY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 2, 2011 - 12:45 AMT

    Osama bin Laden's remains were buried at sea, U.S. officials have
    confirmed.

    Bin Laden had been hiding in a two-storey villa 100 yards from
    a Pakistani military academy when four helicopters carrying U.S.
    anti-terror forces swooped in the early morning hours.

    After he was killed senior American officials said the body would be
    handled according to Islamic practice and tradition. That practice
    calls for the body to be buried within 24 hours.

    Finding a country willing to accept the remains of the world's most
    wanted terrorist would have been difficult, the U.S. official said,
    so the U.S. decided to bury him at sea.

    The location of his burial was not revealed.

    A U.S. official said one of bin Laden's sons was also killed in the
    raid along with three others, but the official did not name the son
    or the others killed.

    Pakistani officials and a witness said bin Laden's guards opened fire
    from the roof of the building and one of the choppers crashed. The
    sound of at least two explosions rocked the small north-western town
    of Abbottabad where the al Qaida chief made his last stand. The U.S.

    said no Americans were harmed in the raid.

    Abbottabad, home to at least one regiment of the Pakistani army,
    is dotted with military buildings and home to thousands of army
    personnel. Surrounded by hills and with mountains in the distance, it
    is less than half a days drive from the border region with Afghanistan,
    where most intelligence assessments believed bin Laden was hiding.

    The news that he was killed in an army town in Pakistan will raise
    more pointed questions about how he managed to evade capture and
    whether Pakistan's military and intelligence leadership knew of his
    whereabouts and sheltered him.

    Critics have long accused elements of Pakistan's security establishment
    of protecting bin Laden, though Islamabad has always denied this,
    The Telegraph reported.




    From: A. Papazian
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